Chesapeake Bay Sewage Treatment Plant Successfully Completes Trials of New Environmentally-Friendly Technology From Canadian Company
Posted on: Tuesday, 1 May 2007, 12:00 CDT
SUFFOLK, Va. and VANCOUVER, British Columbia, May 1 /PRNewswire/ -- A pilot project at the Hampton Roads Sanitation District's (HRSD) Nansemond wastewater treatment plant in Suffolk, Virginia, has successfully completed trials of a new technology that removes phosphorus, nitrogen and other nutrients and converts them into an environmentally-safe commercial fertilizer.
The technology was developed by Ostara Nutrient Recovery Technologies Inc., of Vancouver, British Columbia, to help wastewater treatment plants enhance nutrient removal, increase plant capacity and reduce maintenance costs, while also creating a revenue-producing by-product.
An Ostara pilot facility was operated at the HRSD's Nansemond biological nutrient removal wastewater treatment plant located on the James River, a tributary of the Chesapeake Bay, from October 2006 to March 2007.
Bill Balzer, the Nansemond Treatment Plant manager, said HRSD is now analyzing the Ostara pilot plant results and considering whether to build a full-scale plant using the new technology.
"The rate of phosphorus and ammonia recovery was of great interest to us and could provide some very real operating efficiencies and capacity increases to the plant. We are interested in and are currently reviewing a proposal for a full-scale facility using the new technology from Ostara to be deployed at our Nansemond treatment plant," said Balzer.
Phillip Abrary, President and CEO of Ostara, said many wastewater treatment plants, such as Nansemond, are effective at biologically removing phosphorus and nitrogen but are left with the problem of handling the nutrients in the recycle stream after anaerobic digestion.
Treatment plants typically dewater the digested solids to separate solids from liquids. Solids can be composted or incinerated. Liquids, which contain high levels of nutrients, are typically reprocessed back through the wastewater system, which increases operating cost.
In addition, this stream may cause problems by clogging pipes with a concrete-like scale called struvite -- the result of phosphorus and ammonia (nitrogen) combining with magnesium. More importantly, these recycled nutrients can occupy 25 to 50 per cent of the waste water treatment plant's nutrient removal capacity.
"Our plant integrates into the treatment system, processes the recycled liquid and recovers phosphorus and other nutrients -- and then converts them into a high-quality environmentally-friendly commercial fertilizer that can generate revenue for the municipality," said Abrary.
"Ostara's process is complementar to what HRSD has been doing and may address a missing piece in the biological nutrient removal equation. The pilot plant's results demonstrated a consistent capability to recover more than 85 per cent of the phosphorus and 40 per cent of the ammonia," said Abrary.
Abrary said the first commercial scale plant using his company's technology will begin operating this month in Edmonton, Alberta, and a pilot project will begin operating this month in Portland, Oregon. As many as 400 municipalities in North America and 500 in Europe are potential customers for the Ostara process.
The fertilizer by-product from the Ostara process, named Crystal Green(TM), is the only slow-release fertilizer with a combination of nitrogen, phosphorus and magnesium. Unlike most fertilizers, Crystal Green(TM) dissolves slowly over a nine-month period and is, therefore, environmentally safe because it does not leach into the water table. Crystal Green is an ideal product for turf (golf courses) markets, specialty agriculture and other markets that value slow release fertilizers.
About Hampton Roads Sanitation District:
Since HRSD's inception in 1940 to eliminate sewage pollution in the tidal waters of the Chesapeake Bay, its overriding mission has been to protect public health and the environment through wastewater treatment. HRSD's service area includes 17 cities and counties of southeast Virginia, an area of over 3,100 square miles with a population of 1.6 million. Wastewater flows from municipal piped systems to HRSD's interceptor system of pipes and pump stations to 13 treatment plants with a combined capacity of 231 million gallons per day (MGD).
About Ostara
Ostara Nutrient Recovery Technologies Inc., founded in 2005, is a Vancouver-based company commercializing proprietary technologies that recover resources from sewage and recycle them into valuable products.
Ostara's struvite recovery process, developed at the University of British Columbia, recovers pollutants that would otherwise be released into the environment, helps sewage treatment plants reduce operating costs and meet environmental regulations, and provides municipalities with revenue from the sale of the recovered pollutants that are recycled into environmentally-safe slow release fertilizer.
Ostara Nutrient Recovery Technologies Inc.
CONTACT: Debra Hadden of James Hoggan & Associates, +1-604-240-3196,dhadden@hoggan.com, for Ostara Nutrient Recovery Technologies Inc.; or NancyL. Munnikhuysen, Chief of Communications of Hampton Roads Sanitation District,+1-757-460-7058, nmunnikhuysen@hrsd.com
Source: PRNewswire
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